1st Edition

What is Land For? The Food, Fuel and Climate Change Debate

Edited By Michael Winter, Matt Lobley Copyright 2009
360 Pages
by Routledge

360 Pages
by Routledge

362 Pages
by Routledge

In recent decades agricultural commodity surpluses in the developed world have contributed to a mantra of 'land surplus' in which set-aside, extensification, alternative land uses and 'wilding' have been key terms in debates over land. Quite suddenly all this has changed as a consequence of rapidly shifting commodity markets. Prices for cereals, oil seeds and other globally traded commodities have... Read more
Acknowledgements Contributors 1. Introduction: Knowing the Land Part I: New Uses of Land: Technologies, Policies, Tools and Capacities 2. Strategic Land Use for Ecosystem Services 3. Perennial Energy Crops: Implications and Potential 4. Soaking up the Carbon 5. Anaerobic Digestion and its Implications for Land Use 6. Watery Land: The Management of Lowland Floodplains in England 7. Ecosystems Services in Dynamic and Contested Landscapes: The Case of UK Uplands Part II: Emerging Issues and New Perspectives 8. Adaptation of Biodiversity to Climate Change: An Ecological Perspective 9. Public Engagement in New Productivism 10. A Story of Becoming: Landscape Creation through an Art/Science Dynamic 11. Agricultural Stewardship, Climate Change and Public Goods Debate 12. Regulating Land Use Technologies: How Does Government Juggle the Risks? 13. The Land Debate - 'Doing the Right Thing' Ethical Approaches to Land -use Decision Making 14. Conclusions Index

Biography

Michael Winter OBE is Professor of Rural Policy and Director of the Centre for Rural Policy Research, Department of Politics, at the University of Exeter. Matt Lobley is Senior Research Fellow and Assistant Director of the Centre for Rural Policy Research.

'Sustainable land use is the first 'tipping point' to be faced over the whole globe...This volume helpfully sets the scene for a new sustainable land revolution.' Tim O'Riordan, Emeritus Professor of Environmental Studies, University of East Anglia, UK 'If you want informed reflection on today's crucial debates, policy-making and planning about land use, this book is well worth a read.' Country Way Magazine 'This is the type of book that makes you revise your lecture notes. Although I continue to rehearse arguments about post-productivism and countrysides of consumption, I am aware that I sound increasingly unconvincing. Whilst not yet able entirely to consign these concepts to history, it is instructive to read a book that says, basically, society faces a range of real and urgent problems, the answer to which lies in the soil.' Journal of Environmental Policy and Planning